This Disaster Recovery Planning
can be used as a Disaster Recovery and Business Continuity Plan template for any enterprise. The Disaster Recovery template and
supporting material have been updated to be Sarbanes-Oxley and HIPAA
compliant. The Disaster Planning Template comes as a Word document
and includes:
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Disaster Recovery Plan and Business Continuity Template
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Business and IT Impact Analysis Questionnaire
-
Work Plan
-
Disaster Recovery / Business Continuity Audit Program
New are:
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Compliance with ISO
27001 and ISO 27002 (formerly is0 17799), HIPAA, PCI, Sarbanes-Oxley and HIPAA standards
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Web Site Disaster Recovery Planning Form
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Department Disaster Recovery Activation Workbook
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Quick Reference Guide
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Team Alert List (Form)
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DRP Team Responsibilities
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DRP Team Checklist
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Critical Function(s) Definition
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Normal Business Hour Response Procedures
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After Hours Response Procedures
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DRP Location(s) Definition
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DRP Recovery Procedures
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Notification Procedures
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Notification Call List (Form)
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Updated Business and IT Impact Analysis Questionnaire
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Vendor Disaster Recovery Questionnaire
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Vendor Phone List Form Updated
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Key Customer Notification Form
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Critical Resources to be Retrieved Form
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Business Continuity Off-Site Materials Form
The premium edition contains 14 full job descriptions. They are:
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Chief Information Officer
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Chief Security Officer
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Chief Compliance Officer
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VP Strategy and Architecture
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Director Disaster Recovery and Business Continuity
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Director e-Commerce
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Manager Disaster Recovery
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Manager Disaster Recovery and Business Continuity
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Disaster Recovery Coordinator
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Disaster Recovery - Special Projects Supervisor
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Manager Database
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Capacity Planning Supervisor
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Manager Media Library Support
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Manager Site Management
The DRP template is over
200 pages and includes everything needed to
customize the Disaster Recovery Plan to fit your specific
requirement. The electronic document includes proven written text
and examples for the following major sections of a disaster recovery
plan:
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Plan Introduction
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Business Impact Analysis - including a sample impact matrix
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DRP Organization Responsibilities pre and post disaster - drp
checklist
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Backup Strategy for Data Centers, Departmental File Servers,
Wireless Network servers, Data at Outsourced Sites, Desktops (In
office and "at home"), Laptops and PDA's.
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Recovery Strategy including approach, escalation plan process
and decision points
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Disaster Recovery Procedures in a check list format
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Plan Administration Process
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Technical Appendix including definition of necessary phone
numbers and contact points
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Job Description for Disaster Recovery Manager (3 pages long) -
entire disaster recovery team job descriptions are available.
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Work Plan to modify and implement the template. Included is a
list of deliverables for each task. (Risk Assessment and
Vulnerability Assessment)
There is a extensive section that show how a full test of the DRP
can be conducted. It includes
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Disaster Recovery Manager Responsibilities
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Distribution of the Disaster Recovery Plan
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Maintenance of the Business Impact Analysis
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Training of the Disaster Recovery Team
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Testing of the Disaster Recovery Plan
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Evaluation of the Disaster Recovery Plan Tests
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Maintenance of the Disaster Recovery Plan
Click on the link below to get the DRP/BC sample pages now and make
it a part of your disaster recovery toolkit.


Testimonials
Testimonial -
Dave Baker - City of Hamilton -
I have found
the DRP template invaluable!
Testimonial -
Bob Rifenbury -MCSE/CCNA Lauch
Testing Lab -
The DRP Template saved me about 6 months of work!
Testimonial - Kelly Keeler -
Martin's Point Health Care -
I have received and I began using the template
immediately. IT IS GREAT! Made this process a snap for me. Cut my
documentation time down from.
weeks to hours! This document has made,
what began to be an overwhelming process turn into a snap!
Testimonial -
Juan Stamos - Mexico City
Corporation -
We had a DRP in place, but
needed a more user friendly structure. The Disaster Recovery Template (Gold
edition) has that structure. It was very easy to quickly move our DRP into
Janco's DRP Template -- a real added value.
* Update service is for 12 months unless it is purchased within 30
days of the purchase of the Template. Janco reserves the right
to validate purchase of the customer was made for the template.
This template is
not for resale or re-distribution -
Disaster Recovery Planning Template
Disaster Recovery
Template, Disaster Recovery
Live Disaster Recovery News
03/01/2010
- Backup Strategy
Enterprise data protection and backup schemes range from the
very simple to the very complex. In all but the simplest environments, you
typically see a patchwork of software and hardware functionality layered
together to prevent nearly any kind of data loss or corruption. Unfortunately,
the technology deployed often defines the capabilities, rather than
the business defining the capabilities that the technology must deliver. This is
a dangerous trap to fall into -- both for you and for your
organization.
Like an onion, a well-designed data protection scheme has many
different layers, with functionality provided by different pieces of software
and hardware. A wide range of technologies may come into play: SAN-to-SAN
replication, SAN-provided storage snapshots, off-host backups, disk-to-disk
backup, deduplication, virtual tape libraries, and server-based
snapshots.
-
more info
02/20/2010
- Security and DRP play a role in CIO Infrastructure Design
Designing
IT Infrastructure requires CIOs to consider the globalized world they are now
in. It is necessary and valuable for CIOs to understand the fundamental trends
that are pushing businesses to redesign their operations around this new
reality. Factors they need to
consider are:
-
Security -
With the growing importance of digital applications and data, the sources of
threats to enterprise data have multiplied dramatically. Everything from
natural disasters to criminals to corrupt sources within the company might try
to steal or corrupt data. While businesses do everything that they can to stop
these threats in the first place, they still must be prepared to recover from
these threats as quickly as possible.
-
Business Continuity
and Disaster Planning - As businesses have expanded the need for
anytime, anywhere application access has become a requirement. At the same
time, follow the sun (global 24/7) operations have shrinking maintenance
windows and a need for applications to be running at all times. Delay or loss
of data for any reason system failure, natural disasters has a domino-like
effect across the entire organization, at any time of the day or
night.
-
Flexibility -
Most businesses now operate across international borders and CIOs must be able
to respond to opportunities and challenges faster than ever before. CIOs are
usually battling well-resourced organizations that may be based where the
opportunity originated, or another globalizing company that is reaching out
for new opportunities. In order to compete, a business has to be faster to
deliver a product or service as good, or better, than that of potentially any
other company in the world.
-
Simplicity -
Increases in technology have typically led to increased complexity. While per
unit costs of technology are always decreasing, in aggregate companies see an
increase in cost. With the pressure on IT to act less as a cost center and
more as a way to increase the profitability of business units, just adding
more storage, more bandwidth, or additional technologies throughout the
organization is no longer an acceptable approach to managing information
technology. Successful CIOs are investing in numerous technologies including;
continuous data protection, virtualization, and wireless connectivity. They are trying slim down ITs
footprint while increasing their businesss competitive advantages. The CIO is
typically in a difficult position, assessing where to try and cut costs while
still moving forward with a plan to continually enhance IT services to the
business.
-
more info
02/10/2010
- Data De-duplication is a required tool for Disaster Planning
When
it comes to backup and
recovery, mid-market organizations are challenged to improve backup
performance and reliability, manage costs, keep pace with capacity requirements,
improve recovery performance and reliability and deal with tape media
management. These requirements are driving deployment of disks with
de-duplication in backup processes. But data de-duplication is only beginning to
take hold in backup processes. For organizations employing tape-based backup strategies, use of
de-duplication could enable disk-based protection while driving the cost of
secondary disks closer to that of tape storage. -
more info
01/31/2010
- Bank of America site goes down....
Bank of America was investigating an outage that affected an
unknown number of customers but had ruled out a cyberattack, a representative
said. Their disaster recovery plan was not
activated.
"Our online-banking service is available," spokeswoman Anne Pace
said in a telephone interview on Friday afternoon. "We ruled out a cyberattack,
but are working with partners to determine the root cause."
Disaster Recovery Plan Template Business
Continuity
The Standard - Over 3,000 Companies World Wide have chosen this
DRP/BCP Template


Checks found the site down during the morning and
afternoon, as late as 2:50 p.m. PST. Several people reported the outage
to and Business Insider reported that the site was down most of the
morning. Several others reported that they were able to get through to the site,
although at least one said it was sluggish.
Bank of America's Twitter account was reporting that "Our Web
site is available. However, some customers are having intermittent issues with
access. We are working to determine the root cause."
One person reported that he discovered a work-around: "I tried
going to the site via my mobile device, and it works! So then I typed the URL
that my mobile device uses into my desktop browser, and I can get in. So it
doesn't seem that the Web site, per se, is down, only the 'normal' entry
portal?"
-
more info
01/23/2010
- DR Plan tools defined in Janco DR Template
Your DR plan should be updated with tools that are collaborative in nature,
enable teams and people to communicate remotely at any time, over any channel,
and without dependency upon your IT infrastructure.
Emergency notification and communication technology should provide not only
an automated solution for message delivery, but also:
- Enable companies to reach end users and allow them to respond anytime and
from anywhere.
- Enable notification over any text enabled or voice enabled device
(inbound/outbound).
- Provide local and global notification capabilities.
- Provide a centralized, interactive tool for executing your DR plan,
monitoring tasks and enabling real time coordination of resources and status
updates.
Many organizations' DR efforts fall short once initial notifi cation has
occurred. Rarely do organizations have a centralized method for employees, DR
teams, executives, customers, etc., to access the DR Plan, task lists, or
documents necessary to recovery efforts such as contracts and purchase orders.
Prior to purchasing the Janco Disaster Recovery
Plan Template, one large regional health care provider complained that once
notifcation occurred, they were not able to coordinate the simplest of
tasks. In a crisis situation, often times employees have no method to stay
apprised of information. Stories abound of disaster recovery teams that become
occupied answering employee phone calls and answering basic questions about a
crisis, and are unable to focus on their primary task - managing through a
crisis to recovery.
-
more info
01/19/2010
- How a CIO should chose a backup site
Disasters cost money, interrupt business operations and
may cause the enterprise or government agency to fail, which makes planning a
business continuity issue. Disasters can interfere with or even terminate IT and
communications services. It does not matter whether the disaster affects the
enterprise, government or service provider. Floods, fire, volcanoes, earthquakes
and other events can destroy a primary and backup site if they are too close
together.
Telecom
service providers can offer expert advice on where to locate a backup facility
and should position themselves with CIOs to offer both consulting and services.
After all, they have experience planning for their own primary and backup
facilities, as well.
A CIO's
selection of the backup site location will always have risks and liabilities
attached to the decision. Adequate and reliable communications to the backup
site and communications between the primary and backup sites are what most
service providers can successfully offer to the CIO.


In choosing
a backup site, CIO's must first determine how big a disaster plan for and budget
for it. The level of disaster planning increases as you goes down the following
list:
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Building closed/evacuated
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Loss of
power
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Loss of
communications
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Facility damaged/destroyed
-
Community disaster (10-to-30 mile range)
-
Regional disaster (30-to100 mile range)
-
more info
01/15/2010
- Cloud backup as a strategy for Disaster Planning
One of the biggest challenges of managing a backup
infrastructure is that no one wants the job. In large companies, the backup
administrator position is an ever-revolving door often staffed with junior
people. In smaller companies, backing up the infrastructure is a peripheral duty
that is often ignored. The result is the same in both cases: bad
backups.
One potential solution to this problem is cloud backup services
- or managed backup services, depending on your preferred terminology. The idea
is simple: Outsource this undesirable part of IT to a company whose staff
specializes in it and youll never look back.

Cloud backup services take advantage of many of the technologies
mentioned here, but allow customers to use the service without having to manage
the process. Instead, customers simply install a piece of software on the
systems being backed up, and the cloud backup service does the rest. But as with
any backup system, make sure you have a way to verify that backups are working
the way theyre supposed to be working.
The unglamorous world of backups is like the rest of IT: You
never hear from anyone until something goes wrong. Modernizing your
infrastructure, when planned and executed carefully, can reduce your liability
dramatically. But as you make those improvements, remember the backup mantra:
Test everything and believe nothing.
-
more info